Zeitgeist308
Member
Funny thing that "human nature".withoutaface said:I mean, if you look at the software market, people are doing it for free.
BTW, I have no disagreements about the other replies you provided above. This is not an debate about the correctness libertarianism.
Running from this premise, how does is the "conformity" it's logical conclusion? "Conformity" in what sense? Why is this "conformity" (if it were to exist) necessarily a "bad" thing?withoutaface said:What you've proposed relies on most (all?) of the population deciding that they want such a system to be in place and maintaining an interest in doing so.
Yes, and this does involve a centralised (plan for the) distribution of resources. However, here, by "centralised" I am not using the word in the sense you're thinking. A system of non-hierarchical, directly democratic workers councils is a centralised body despite it's at first decentralised appearance. If you are interested in a blueprint of potential methods of distribution you may wish to read the following: Fundamental Principles of Communist Production and Distribution by the GIK and Workers' Councils and the Economics of Self-Managed Society by Castoriadis (please note I have not read either of the above works but have been recommended them. If you do read through them please take them with a grain of salt as both have been written by council-communist insprired groups/individuals and thus it is likely that both suffer from a fetish of the management and tend to fail to produce a very sophisticated analysis of either capitalism or communism as a mode of production)withoutaface said:Further, there has to be some way to decide how goods are distributed.
I'm afraid I don't fully understand what you are trying to say here. Capitalism is a mode of production. Changing the management of a capitalist enterprise from that of a hierarchical system of professionals to that of a non-hierarchical system of self-management does not change their fundamentally capitalist character. An article that covers this topic is Communism menas the elimination of the Law of Value and the unification of the Productive Forces from the ICC.withoutaface said:Unless you're telling me that division of labour is a myth, I'm not exactly seeing what valid modes of production there are besides (a) having one person (the employer) decide what happens; and (b) having those who work there decide collectively.
Sorry Zstar, Social Darwinism is discredited today. Ever read Mutual Aid by Kropotkin or (in case you eschew the authority of evolutionary biologists who happen to be anarchists) Mises' Human Action.zstar said:The problem with you Zeitgeist is that you don't embrace the beauty of conflict.
You don't realise that conflicts between people will always exist so long as humans exist.
Look at the way nature is, Everything in nature eats up the next and the strong dominates the weak.
No. I hold the "utopian view" that the consciousness and behaviour of the individual is determined (or at least constrained) by the environment and social structures in which they inhabit.zstar said:You are just as I have been suspected all along, You are one with a Utopian view who assumes that humans will always be honest and will be willing to give to others.
Obviously you fail to differentiate between the rule over men (in the form of class rule ie. the state) and the administration of things.zstar said:In abolishing governments and wages completely you've unknowingly created another conflict, Each segment of society will want their own way.
A system of barter (as with all markets) assumes the scarcity of the goods in question. Since communism is "post-scarcity", barter will not exist.zstar said:Without wages you have created one huge bartering system which will still lead to conflict anyway.